Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 –Aleksey Navalny’s
new prominence and his success in attracting young people– which some see
reflected in the fact that he now has more “likes” than Moscow TV (politsovet.ru/54872-navalnyy-obognal-po-chislu-podpischikov-pervyy-kanal-rt-i-rossiyu-24.html)
– Putin loyalists are attacking him and others asking what kind of a leader he may
be.
Putin’s press spokesman said many of
the young people attended the demonstrations only because they had promised to
be paid, a claim for which he provided no evidence and which says more about
Kremlin perceptions about motivation than about Navalny’s followers (kp.ru/daily/26658.5/3679562/).
United Russia Duma Deputy Vitaly Milonov,
who has recently attracted notice for his comments about Jews and Masons,
suggested that the young people had taken part because they were “sexually
unsatisfied” and tired of just watching pornography all the time (znak.com/2017-03-28/milonov_obyasnil_revolyuciyu_detey_seksualnoy_neudovletvorennostyu_i_pornofilmami).
And Yana Amelina, a pro-Putin specialist
on the Caucasus, said that whatever the cause, the presence of so many young
people in Navalny’s movement sets the stage for violence given the
impetuousness of youth and their sense of deathless invincibility fed by video
games (facebook.com/yana.amelina.92/posts/1513464625351696).
But far more interesting are the
first articles talking about what Navalny is and how he is likely to behave in
the future. There will certainly be more, but two from today are worth noting:
one noting that Navalny is in many ways like a “young and sober” Yeltsin but
that faces someone other than Gorbachev, and a second that argues he is likely
to be another Putin.
On the Kasparov.ru portal, Moscow
commentator Igor Yakovenko says that Sunday’s demonstrations show that “Russia
has ceased to be a country with only one politicians.” It now has two and thus
Navalny is the leader of the opposition to Vladimir Putin and the party of
power (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58DA11A4BBDA8).
In many but not all ways, Navalny
resembles Boris Yeltsin: he was making a good career in the bureaucracy but
like the earlier Russian leader was “organically incapable” of working within a
specific command. Instead, both had to strike out on their own – and ultimately
by themselves rather than in any organization they might create.
Like Yeltsin, “Navalny is a populist
exploiting the idea of justice. Yeltsin’s main these was the struggle with the privileges
of the nomenklatura” – or in contemporary language, “struggle with corruption.”
But in both cases, this was “a classical ‘false goal,’” one used by its authors
to attract support for other purposes.
Moreover, both were tacticians
rather than strategists because they lacked any grand plan. But that brings us
to the way in which the two are different: Navalny may appear to be “a young
and sober Yeltsin,” but unlike Yeltsin, he isn’t really willing to acknowledge
his shortcomings in this regard and to listen to others.
“Yeltsin knew,” Yakovenko continues,
“that he did not have a sufficient theoretical background and was open to the
support of experts.” But with Navalny,
one has the impression that he isn’t really interested in the ideas of others
and that he “considers himself an independent politician and is prepared to
accept others” only as followers.
But there is a more fundamental
different: “Putin is not Yeltsin or even Chernomyrdin. He is quite prepared to
use massive force against anyone to stay in power. “And this means that there will be a Tianamen
Square and a complete one at that. And such squares will be in Moscow, St.
Petersburg, Vladivostok and everywhere protest needs to be suppressed.”
And on the Forum-MSK portal, another
Moscow correspondent, Yakov Azimandis, argues that “Russia has two misfortunes,
Putin and Navalny. Putin with his
friends and relatives has already for 17 years sucked the country dry and supposes
that this will continue forever” (forum-msk.org/material/politic/13001047.html).
If he comes to power, Navalny is
likely to do the same, Azimandis suggests. The opposition leader “in words
criticize particular corrupt personages,” something even Putin has done, but
Navalny “almost doesn’t criticize the system as a whole,” suggesting he might
change it less than some of his supporters expect.
“In the future,” he writes, Navalny “as
a minimum, hopes to become a new systemic oppositwion figure … and in the best
case to become the head of the country and for another 20 years to suck the
country dry if anything remains after the current camarilla.”
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